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Fairness as an issue in school-based assessment

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University of Hong Kong Faculty of Education Inaugural Seminar Series English Language School-based Assessment: Integrating Theory and Practice, Jan 9th 2006 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fairness as an issue in school-based assessment


1
Fairness as an issue in school-based
assessment
University of Hong Kong Faculty of Education
Inaugural Seminar SeriesEnglish Language
School-based Assessment Integrating Theory and
Practice, Jan 9th 2006
  • Liz Hamp-Lyons, Honorary Professor
  • Faculty of Education, University of Hong Kong

2
Changing assessment cultures
  • The official adoption in Hong Kong of the UK
    Assessment Reform Groups (1998) distinction
    between assessment for learning, and assessment
    of learning has stimulated the beginnings of a
    major paradigm shift
  • Hong Kong schools are moving from a culture of
    testing to a learning and assessment culture
    (Hamp- Lyons 1999 in press).

3
Changing assessment cultures in Hong Kong
  • http//cd.emb.gov.hk/basic_guide/BEGuideeng0821/ch
    apter05.html
  • Based on the beliefs that every student is
    unique and possesses the ability to learn, and
    that we should develop their multiple
    intelligences and potentials there should be a
    change in assessment practices and schools should
    put more emphasis on 'Assessment for Learning' as
    an integral part of the learning, teaching and
    assessment cycle

4
Changing assessment cultures in Hong Kong
  • In other words, teachers should use
    assessments (e.g. as simple as effective verbal
    questioning, observation of student behaviour)
    and provide immediate feedback to enhance student
    learning in everyday classroom lessons. The focus
    is on why they do not learn well and how to help
    them to improve rather than just to use
    assessments to find out what knowledge students
    have learned.

5
Theory and practice
  • The HKU Faculty of Educations SBA team is
    working on an evolving but coherent programme of
    research and evaluation, professional
    development, and system-wide support (Davison
    2005)
  • Overall, the teams work in SBA aims to carry out
    both basic research (addressing fundamental
    theoretical problems in language assessment) and
    applied research (responding to the needs of
    education communities)

6
The HKCEE English SBA initiative
  • SBA is integrated into the teaching and learning
    process, with teachers involved at
  • all stages of the assessment cycle
  • ? planning the assessment programme
  • ? identifying and developing appropriate
  • assessment tasks
  • ? overseeing the assessment process
  • ? making final judgments

7
Fairness theory and practice
  • In theory, fairness in an assessment for learning
    context means that every learner has the highest
    quality opportunity possible for demonstrating
    that/what s/he has learned
  • However, theory of what fairness is remains
    underdeveloped and fragmented different kinds of
    theorists take different positions

8
Contexts for fairness
  • In practice, fairness in an SBA context means
    that the right and responsibility of being fair
    lies with the teacher (see slide 4)
  • However, in practice different stakeholders have
    different understandings and different
    expectations of what makes something fair

9
Fairnessthe Hong Kong context
  • Research studies have found that assessment
    innovation was severely constrained by
    traditional school culture and by teacher,
    parental and student expectations (Cheung Ng
    2000 Carless 2001 Adamson Davison 2003
    Davison Tang, 2003 Hamp-Lyons, Chen Mok
    2000).
  • Many teachers reported they cannot assess,
    only mark. They feel unable to make a
    difference in teaching and learning, to respond
    to individual needs, because of community
    expectations of convergence and commonality.
    Teachers feel their assessment processes are
    expected to change, without fundamental purposes
    being explicitly challenged. Such role conflict
    results in increasing stress and a decline in
    perceived teacher expertise.

10
Teachers understandings of fairness
  • R How? How is it fair?
  • T1 It can help the students better. The teachers
    are here to help. It is more encouraging because
    it lasts for a period.

11
Teachers understandings of fairness
  • T1 All the ideas are good but still there are
    loop-holes. The only thing Im afraid is what if
    I am the assessor and my relatives are going to
    be the students, so how can we check or ensure
    that my relatives will not be assessed by me and
    there will be absolute fairness. I think its a
    concern to the public.

12
Teachers understandings of fairness
  • T2 I found HK students really concerned about
    the issue of fairness as well, so I mean.
    evaluation is going to have to be as standardized
    as possible, I think it is going to be a big
    problem for a lot of teachers and students to
    try, you know, not just among different schools
    but even within one school, different classes
    how do you standardize it in a way thats fair to
    everyone?

13
Teachers understandings of fairness
  • R What are you trying to standardize?
  • T2 Wow, just the assessment criteria, because as
    you said it does count. And I found the HK
    students as soon as they know these are real
    marks and these marks are really counted for
    something, then they get motivated right away
    first of all we have to go through some kind of
    learning curricula adjustment to get the teachers
    and the students used to this sort of style and I
    mean that will be expected.

14
Teachers understandings of fairness
  • T2 such a large window where is not so fair,
    right, if you know what Im trying to say, the
    differences between the schools and different
    banding of schools and then even schools like
    ours, the difference between the classes.

15
Fairnessthe system?
  • T3 Yeah, I think, you know, I think basically
    the EMB whenever they need to promote certain
    changes to the education system, they should
    really think of, you know, is there really a need
    to change? If there is a need to change, think of
    how to make the changes smoother from one system
    to another and also what they can do, what they
    can do for both the teachers and the students
    because you know, the teachers are working on the
    front line, right?

16
T4 As I have mentioned earlier, I would say as a
teacher, a school teacher, examination in the
school usually shares two purposes. One is
assessing them the other is teaching... In fact
every time I teach them, not just assessing them.
Because after their examination, I give them some
feedback, right after the examination, group
after group. It really helps them to improve and
so thats more still I think the SBA component
is better because it can encourage students to do
better. In a way, I think it will affect the
atmosphere of the school, the learning
atmosphere. The students think that if they learn
harder, I mean they can get some marks in
advance. And I think it is the right direction.
17
The need for managed change
  • Teachers cannot be expected to change their
    culture of assessment without the support of
    their panel, the school Principal, the EMB/CDI
    and the HKEAA
  • Teachers also need the support of targeted
    professional development in new assessment
    cultures
  • Messages about the purpose and value of change
    also need to reach parents and the public

18
Constraints on teachers concepts of fairness
  • These constraints stem partly from the inadequate
    attention that is paid to educational assessment
    in professional training (not only in Hong Kong
    but almost world-wide), but also
  • From outside influences as Pryor and Lubisi
    (2002) report in research on AfL in Ghana and
    South Africa, worry is extrinsic rather than
    intrinsic.

19
What is fairness?
  • Stobart (2005) makes the point that fairness is
    fundamentally a sociocultural, rather than a
    technical, issue. He says that
  • Fair assessment cannot be considered in isolation
    from both the curriculum and the educational
    opportunities of the students.
  • Fairness is a justice that goes beyond acting in
    agreed upon ways and seeks to look at justice of
    the arrangements leading up to and resulting from
    those actions. (p.1)

20
What the 2007 English SBA does
  • With school-based assessment and assessment for
    learning, the teachers role is foregrounded.
  • The teacher is mediator in the assessment
    process.
  • An assessment that puts a teacher and a known
    student together, that encourages mediation, also
    encourages diagnostic, interactive and
    collaborative characteristics in the assessments,
    even those for summative purposes. 
  • The guidelines booklet Introduction to the
    School-based Assessment Component booklet (SBA
    Consultancy Team, 2005, commissioned by the
    HKEAA) marks a shift in the assessor's role from
    that of an external "tester" with no
    responsibility to the student other than to make
    a reliable judgment, to that of a mediator and
    facilitator whose responsibility is to see that
    every student has the best possible opportunity.

21
In assessment for learning, the teacher becomes a
mediator and facilitator who is
  • sensitive to different learners levels and needs
  • able to make effective use of questioning,
    prompts and probes to evaluate as well as promote
    student learning
  • able to help lower proficiency students to
    demonstrate their full range of oral skills
  • able to challenge higher proficiency students.
  • This form of assessment is commonly known as
    dynamic assessment (Anton 2003 Lantolf and
    Poehner 2004) or educative assessment (Wiggins
    2005), and is grounded in Vygotskys theory of
    the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) (1978).

22
Areas for clarification-1
  • In a questionnaire to SBA teacher trainers, the
    question on which they were least agreed among
    themselves was
  • To be fair to students, all students should be
    given the same amount of time for their task.
  • (SD 1.61 on 6-point scale)

23
Views of fairness
Fairness in the current HKU examination system Fairness in the SBA component
Treat all students equally (vs. equitably) Treat each student individually (i.e. unequally)
Same task, same input, same conditions, same length of time for all Different arrangements for different students according to their language proficiency
Major aim To give a consistent grade to each student in an invariable settings for selection purposes Major aim To provide opportunity for all students to demonstrate their best. Learning culture for all ? sense of achievement.
24
Why is equal not fair?
  • Within assessment for learning, fair assessment
    is defined as assessment that provides the best
    opportunities for all, that provides checks and
    balances to help all participants in the system
    feel that they and their peers are acting fairly
    or being assessed fairly

25
Why is equal not fair?
  • Gender or age factors
  • Confidence vs shyness
  • Self-centred vs other-centred
  • equality is a myth, a goal that is never
    attained research shows that all oral language
    assessors vary according to candidate
    characteristics (e.g. Brown 2003 Iwashita 2004)

26
Areas for clarification-2
  • The other questions where SBA teacher trainers
    views were very varied was
  • The main goal of the standardization session is
    to check the accuracy of the teachers marking.
  • (SD 1.58 on 6-point scale where 1Disagree)

27
Standardization is not about accuracy---a
  • standardisation is one of the areas of checks
    and balances provided in the HKEAA English SBA
    system
  • Teachers meet together, look at/listen to/discuss
    student oral samples, the tasks students have
    done, etc
  • They share their scores and talk about why they
    think a sample is at a level on each domain

28
Standardization is not about accuracy---b
  • Sharing and talking are key processes that lead
    to understanding and to common ground
  • Therefore a teacher may choose to adjust a score
    after such a discussion
  • But the focus of the meetings is collegial
    support and sharing, not checking each others
    accuracy

29
Changing practice, changing theory
  • Following Black et al (2003) the HKEAAs English
    SBA innovation is changing theory by changing
    practice
  • Notions of fairness are being expanded and
    redefined
  • The overpowering influence of the narrow concept
    of reliability is being replaced by a more
    appropriate one -- trustworthiness
  • but the system has much to do to explain this to
    all levels of the community

30
In conclusion
  • Messick (1999) discusses issues of
  • Access
  • Assessments that restrict the access to only some
    of a student population are not fair
  • Quality
  • Assessments that are not of validated high
    quality are not fair
  • Student development
  • Assessments that do not provide means for
    students to develop in the knowledge/skill
    assessed are not fair
  • Public policy
  • Assessments that exist within an inadequate
    public policy environment are unlikely to be fair

31
The fundamental fairness
  • Overall the purpose of assessment is to improve
    standards, not merely to measure them. (Review
    of secondary education in England, 1993-1997.
    Government Office for Standards in Education
    OFSTED 1998).
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